A Bill of Electronic Rights and Ethics

Version 0.23 (1996)
Author: Peter Merel

The intention of this document is to provide an ethical standard with
which to measure the policies of states and corporations in regard to
the Internet and related multicast communications networks. This
document is not intended to be used as legislation; it is intended to
qualify legislation.

0. Rights

The following section represents rights that belong to every adult Internet
participant. Laws or policies that infringe upon these rights endanger
the personal liberty, property, security, and ability to resist oppression
of all Internet participants.

Rights of Communication

0.0

The right to accept any information from any source.

0.1

The right of every person to control and license intellectual property
invested in their own original expressions, but not in algorithms nor
other properties of mathematics.

0.2

The right to transmit any information to any person, as limited only
by intellectual property rights.

0.3

The right to publish any information in any unmoderated forum, and to
submit any information to any moderated forum, as limited only by
intellectual property rights.

Rights of Privacy

0.4

The right of every person to refuse to disclose any information they
originate or receive.

0.5

The right of every person to encrypt, decrypt or transform in any way
any information they originate or receive.

0.6

The right of every person to refuse to disclose the identities of
the originators of information they transmit or receive.

0.7

The right to monitor others only with their prior consent.

0.8

The right to ignore information of any nature.

Rights of Jurisdiction

0.9

The right of every person to abide only by those laws and regulations
that apply at their physical location.

0.10

The right to seek legal recourse against the originators of actions
and expressions that cause damages, but not against any intermediary
person, organisation or medium.

Rights of Access

0.11

The right of access to any information in the public domain, restricted
only by cost.

0.12

The right of every person to access any report, record, policy, regulation
or law that may apply to them, or which has been created in whole or in
part by their representatives or their agents, as limited only by the
Rights of Privacy.

Rights of Administration

0.13

The right, as moderator of a moderated forum, to observe and enforce
the charter of that forum.

0.14

The right, as administrator of a system, to deny participation in that
system to any person for any reason, as limited by contractual obligations.

0.15

The right, as parent or legal guardian of a minor, to control the
information made available to that minor.

1. Ethics

These are ethics that inhere to the exercise of the above
rights. These ethics can not be and should not be guaranteed by
law, as any law that provides such guarantees will infringe upon one
or more of the above rights.

Ethics of Toleration

1.0

It is unethical to suppress the expressions of others, even when
those expressions directly offend your own opinions and beliefs.

1.1

It is unethical to harass or threaten others.

1.2

It is unethical to pursue judicial recourses before exhausting all
conversational and mediatory remedies for perceived damages and inequities.

Ethics of Trust

1.3

It is unethical to publicly distribute the expressions, images or
particulars of others without their consent.

1.4

It is unethical to misrepresent yourself, your observations and opinions,
or the expressions of others.

1.5

It is unethical to request or to transmit information created through the
use of coercion or other non-consensual practices, except with the
consent of the victims of those practices, or, in the case of their
death, incapacity or unavailability, with the consent of their legal
guardians or heirs.

1.6

It is unethical to omit adequate warning with any information
that may mislead or endanger a naive recipient, or which may
spoil the enjoyment of an experience for others.

Ethics of Consideration

1.7

It is unethical to transmit information to persons and forums not
explicitly concerned with that information.

1.8

It is unethical to be inconsiderate of the costs of network bandwidth
and storage space.

Ethics of Regulation

1.9

It is unethical for the representatives of states and corporations
to omit or oppose guarantees in law and policy of the rights represented
in the first section of this document.

1.10

It is unethical for the representatives of states and corporations
to provide or maintain any guarantee in law or policy of the ethics
represented in the second section of this document.

1.11

It is ethical to observe, discuss, refine and promote the rights
and ethics represented in this document.

This document has been constructed from suggestions by and discussions
with many Internet participants from diverse countries and cultures; its
development is supported and promoted by EFA, the EFF and
CPSR.